Kuwait: Min. Al-Saleh attends Armenia Nat”l Day celebration

Kuwait News Agency, Kuwait
Sept 22 2013

Min. Al-Saleh attends Armenia Nat”l Day celebration

23/09/2013 | 01:02 AM | Kuwait News

Minister of Commerce and Industry Anas Al-Saleh

KUWAIT, Sept 22 (KUNA) — Minister of Commerce and Industry Anas
Al-Saleh on Sunday evening represented the Kuwaiti government at the
celebration of Armenia Embassy to mark the country’s 22nd National
Day, highlighting development of bilateral ties and cooperation.

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the celebration, Al-Saleh
said his ministry developed plans to ward off any spillover of
possible regional economic problems on the citizens and expatriates in
Kuwait.

“The government offers subsidy to staples for citizens but in case of
any eventuality the government will be responsible for ensuring the
minimum needs of both citizens and expatriates alike,” he made clear.

The minister was commenting on recent press reports that the
government mulls issuing ration cards for non-Kuwaitis.

Asked about the reported contamination of vegetables and fruits in
Syria, the Minister said: “Kuwait Municipality’s committee on food
safety and the Environment Public Authority work closely to implement
the ban on food imports from Syria.” On the bilateral ties with
Armena, Al-Saleh said the two countries maintain constantly growing
relations in such areas as economy and commerce.

The trade exchanges grew slightly in the farm and food sectors in the
recent years, he noted.

On his part, Armenia Ambassador to Kuwait Fadey Charchoghlyan
commended Kuwait’s “limitless relief effort” for the Syrian refugees
in his country.

The State of Kuwait was one of the first countries which responded
promptly to the humanitarian needs of the Syrian refugees in Armenia,
he said.

The Armenian-Kuwaiti ties are growing steadily in all political,
economic, cultural, social, commercial and educational fields thanks
to the supports of leaders of both countries, he pointed out.

Charchoghlyan noted that the exchanged visits on all levels help
promote the bilateral ties.

He appreciated the roles of Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry
(KCCI) and Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) in promoting the joint
investments.

He voiced hope for signing an agreement with Kuwait on educational
cooperation, and academic and student exchanges, noting that Yerevan
University launched a college for Arabic teaching and Islamic
sciences.

The Armenian diplomat also expressed hope for pushing the level of
relations of his country with GCC and other Arab countries to the
level of the relations with Kuwait.
Armenia has a 6,000-strong community in Kuwait who enjoy security and
welfare, he added. (end) rkf.nfa.gb KUNA 230102 Sep 13NNNN

http://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2335068&language=en

ANKARA: At the Zero Point of the ‘Rojava’…

Radikal, Turkey
Sept 19 2013

At the Zero Point of the ‘Rojava’…

by Cengiz Candar

[Translated from Turkish]

Nusaybin -Former Diyarbakir Chamber of Industry and Trade Chairman
Mehmet Kaya began on the telephone by saying: “Now I am talking in my
identity as a pharmacist.” He continued: “The Rojava [Kurdish term for
‘west,’ used in reference to northern Syria] is falling apart from
lack of drugs. We have launched a campaign on a regional scale. We
have collected four truckloads of medicines and medical supplies. But
we are unable to get them to the other side of the border. If you
could just make this knowna¦”

I answered him saying: “Tomorrow I will be in Nusaybin. I will better
understand the situation there, and will write about it.” The
following day (that is, yesterday), while going down from Mardin
towards the “Silk Road,” the towns of the Rojava that have gone into
the de facto administration of the Kurds were lined up before my eyes
like beads on a string of prayer-beads, and presented a very clear
image. On the right, just across from Senyurt was Derbesiye
[Al-Darbasiyah], while diagonally to the left was Amudah. As for
Al-Qamishli, the largest town in the north of Syria, it is just next
to Nusaybin.

While travelling on the Silk Road towards Nusaybin, the right side of
the road was lined with barbed wire, and there were control towers at
regular intervalsa¦ The Deputy Mayor of Nusaybin, at the wheel, said
“if there should be an accident, and if a car should roll over to the
right, even if nothing might happen otherwise, the mines would
detonate and blow it to bits” and pointed to the minefields just
through the barbed wire, which fill the strip of land between it and
the railroad that comprises the Turkish-Syrian border.

All along the road between Diyarbakir and Nusaybin, he explained to me
how the entire region is focusing on nothing but the Rojava. He has
relatives in Al-Qamishli, just like a good many Nusaybin residents.
Indeed, at the moment, at least 10,000 Syrian citizens have taken
refuge with their relatives in Nusaybin -as Mayor Ayse Gokkan related,
pregnant women, the very aged, and children.

In Nusaybin, with its population of 85,000 people, I spoke with Ayse
Gokkan in the garden of the Mitanni Culture Centre, where the Second
Symposium on Nusaybin in the History of Mesopotamia was being held,
practically next to Al-Qamishli, whose population in normal times has
risen to 350,000. I say: “We are at the absolute zero point between
Turkey and Syria, aren’t we?” She points to just a bit away; the place
where we see the sandbags is considered the border.

Essentially, there is no border or anything of the sort. The Cagcag
River passes through both Nusaybin and Al-Qamishli. And on both sides
of the “virtual” border live Kurds, Assyrians, and Arabs. Epidemic
diseases, and communities that are intimately intertwined, in fact
show no respect for the border on either side of what has essentially
throughout history been the same town (the historical town of
Nusaybin).

Doctor Ramazan Kaya, who is from Nusaybin, tells me about the diseases
caused by the conditions in Syria that are spreading into Turkish
territory from Al-Qamishli and being seen once again in Turkey
-particularly in Mardin province:

“Although cases of measles had not been seen in our region for the
past 10 years, now there are cases numbering in the hundreds being
diagnosed. Cases of malaria had likewise not been seen in the past
decade, but in 2012, over 300 cases of malaria were diagnosed in
Mardin. And cases of Aleppo boil and polio, which had appeared to have
been eliminated, have also begun to be seena¦”

He speaks of reports drawn up regarding what needs to be done, but it
is clearly understood and seen in Nusaybin that the developments in
Syria, by quickly crossing over the Turkish-Syrian border, have been
“infecting” Turkey in every sense.

Mayor Ayse Gokkan, from Suruc (she comes from a village just across
from Kobani [Ayn al-Arab] in the Rojava), who was elected with an
overwhelming majority of almost 90 per cent of the votes in Nusaybin,
complains of the “indifference” of the state in Turkey, which in her
view is strange, and which she sees as excessive. At any rate, as a
result of the pressure created by the public in Nusaybin, which had
come to the point of explosion, and of her own unrelenting contacts,
there has been, for the first time in a month (and the third time
overall), a transit of “aid for the Rojava.”

She said: “We will be in Senyurt in the evening, until morning. Come
and see; we are going to send across 400 tons of food and medical
aida¦”

We were going to leave the “Symposium on Nusaybin in the History of
Mesopotamia” and go to the Senyurt border gate near Kiziltepe, in
order to witness the crossing of dozens of trucks. Indeed, all day
long, Nusaybin was abuzz with excitement on this issue.

Well, then, why, when it was possible to send the aid across to
Al-Qamishli, which is only a stone’s throw away from Nusaybin, did we
have to go 45 minutes further, to the vicinity of Kiziltepe?

Because there are still officials of the Damascus regime at two points
in Al-Qamishli, at the border crossing and at the airport, and they
are keeping the border closed. Al-Qamishli is de facto governed by the
Heyeta Bilind, that is, the “High [Kurdish] Council,” in which the PYD
[Democratic Union Party] predominates. Ayse Gokkan said that “we can
meet at the barbed wire and talk with the High Council whenever we
want,” and thus explained how “unified” the Kurdish struggle on both
sides of the border has become.

For quite a long time, Al-Qamishli has reportedly been open to
crossing in both directions, but Nusaybin has been closed. The
Nusaybin Mayor expressed her astonishment, saying: “We cannot
understand why Turkey closed this crossing for so long.” But now
Nusaybin is open but Al-Qamishli is closed.

Ayse Gokkan explained the reason for this as follows: “Since (PYD
leader) Salih Muslim began to come to Turkey, the Syrians then closed
Al-Qamishli.” As for Turkey’s continually dragging its feet in terms
of opening the Senyurt crossing, she said: “There is only the PYD as
an interlocutor in Derbesiye, on the Syrian side across from Senyurt.”

Kobani and Afrin, the other crossing points into Syria, are also under
the sole control of the PYD, while the Akcakale-Til Abyad and
Karkamis-Jarablus crossings are under the control of the Free Syrian
Army, or in the description of the people of Nusaybin, “the gangs.”
What is meant by “the gangs” is Al-Qa’idah and the other Salafist
organizations in Syria.

The area between Al-Qamishli and Serekaniye, that is, between Nusaybin
and Ceylanpinar, is under the control of the Kurds -essentially the
PYD -and is an area of merciless conflict between “the gangs” and the
PYD/Kurds.

A little later, we would set out for Senyurt, in order to witness the
dispatch to the Rojava Kurds of the 400 tons of food and medical
assistance that the Kurds of Turkey had collected. Just then, a
Turkish journalist working as a cameraman for a foreign television
company approached me in the garden of the Mitanni Culture Centre and
felt the need to provide me with some information:

“At this time yesterday evening, we were in Ceylanpinar. I saw with my
own eyes that six or seven buses, absolutely filled with people,
crossed over rapidly to the other side, to Serekaniye.”

The “Syrian photograph” that can be taken from Nusaybin is that
“Turkish Kurds are providing food and medicine support to the Kurds of
Syria, while someone else in Turkey is, across the same border,
providing military assistance to the militant Islamist groups in
Syria.”

Before setting off on the road from Nusaybin to Kiziltepe, I looked
one more time at the poster on the wall of the Mitanni Culture Centre.
The advertisement for the symposium was, from the top to the bottom,
written in Kurdish, Turkish, Arabic, and the language of Jesus,
Aramaic (Assyrian). The symposium was a serious academic activity
dealing with the “School of Nisibis,” which came about in the fourth
century A. D. and according to some historians was the world’s first
university.

The “School of Nisibis” is evidence of the extraordinary historical
role of the Assyrians and Eastern Christians in this region. So let us
come to the Christians today, who have reportedly fallen to below four
per cent of the total population of the Middle East, which is the
cradle of religions. Yet at the beginning of the First World War, this
percentage was 20 per cent. The possibility exists that, one or two
generations later, there will be no Christians left in the Middle
East.

Certainly it was, first of all, [the Armenian Genocide of] 1915 that
brought the 20-per cent proportion down so drastically. And most
recently, there have been the civil war in Lebanon, the negative
developments in the Palestine area, the war in Iraq, the attacks
against the Copts in Egypt, and naturally, the current state of
affairs in Syria.

A very striking article in the latest issue of Foreign Affairs,
entitled “The Christian Exodus,” concludes as follows: “… The
disappearance of the region’s Christians would also be a disaster for
Muslims. They would confront the task of establishing honourable
societies following these tyrannies. And this would be even more
difficult with the disappearance of the Christians living in their
midsta¦ The Muslims would thus have done away with pluralism, which
is the foundation of genuine democratic social lifea¦”

It is evident that it is the Kurds who in our day best understand this
reality. Particularly those in Turkey, those in the Rojava, and those
in the “South” [Iraqi Kurdistan].

Can we, I wonder, speak of an “alliance between Kurds and non-Muslims”
blossoming in the Middle East, and of this being the greatest
guarantee of “democracy” in the region in the future?

Nusaybin, at least, leads a person to ask this question at the “zero
point” of the Rojavaa.

From: Baghdasarian

La Turquie rejuge les tueurs de Hrant Dink, «l’Arménien»

Le Figaro, France
Mardi 17 Septembre 2013

La Turquie rejuge les tueurs de Hrant Dink, «l’Arménien»

par Marchand, Laure

Un nouveau procès a débuté mardi en l’absence des commanditaires de
l’assassinat du journaliste.

La mort de Hrant Dink, abattu le 19 janvier 2007 à Istanbul, a
désormais des couleurs. Des marches à proximité du trottoir où le
journaliste d’origine arménienne s’est effondré ont été badigeonnées
en rouge bordeaux et en bleu par des inconnus la semaine dernière.
C’est une variante sinistre de la nouvelle mode des escaliers publics
repeints aux couleurs de l’arc-en-ciel par des activistes qui
contestent les dérives autoritaires du gouvernement
islamo-conservateur. Le bordeaux et le bleu sont les couleurs du club
de football de Trabzon, la ville de la mer Noire d’où est originaire
Ogün Samast, l’auteur des coups de feu contre Hrant Dink.

Les plus pessimistes y voient une manifestation de l’impunité des
commanditaires et un mauvais présage de plus concernant le nouveau
procès qui s’est ouvert mardi devant la 14e chambre criminelle, à
Istanbul.

En mai dernier, la Cour de cassation avait confirmé les condamnations
prononcées en première instance et estimé qu’il s’agissait bien d’un
crime organisé. Elle invalidait l’acquittement général prononcé en
2012 concernant l’existence d’un complot. Les avocats de la famille de
Hrant Dink sont satisfaits de cette reconnaissance mais s’inquiètent
d’une possible requalification des faits. «Le premier acte
d’accusation utilisait le terme d’organisation terroriste, qui était
composée de 18 membres, explique – Fethiye Çetin. Désormais, il ne
s’agit plus que d’une organisation criminelle de jeunes nationalistes
et elle ne compte plus que cinq membres.» Ce changement a minima fait
craindre que la lumière sur la dimension politique de l’exécution du
journaliste, qui était haï des nationalistes et harcelé par la
justice, ne soit jamais faite.

Disparition de pièces à conviction

Au cours de l’enquête, de nombreux éléments ont laissé suspecter une
implication de responsables des services de renseignements et de la
police dans la mort du rédacteur en chef du journal Argos, infatigable
porte-voix de la petite communauté arménienne de la Turquie. Mais des
pièces à conviction, comme les enregistrements de vidéos de caméras de
surveillance proches du lieu du crime, avaient disparu. Outre deux
complices, seuls Ogün Samast, gé de 17 ans au moment des faits, et
Yasin Hayal, considéré comme le cerveau, avaient été condamnés lors du
premier procès. Malgré les demandes répétées des parties civiles, les
magistrats ont toujours refusé d’enquêter sur les ramifications
possibles au sein de l’État et de lier le meurtre au réseau Ergenekon,
une structure militaro-mafieuse condamnée pour avoir cherché à
renverser le gouvernement islamo-conservateur.

Mardi matin, à l’ouverture de la nouvelle audience, environ deux cents
personnes ont manifesté devant le tribunal de Caglayan en criant
«l’État doit rendre des comptes». Seuls deux accusés, dont Yasin
Hayal, ont comparu à la barre. Dans une lettre rendue publique, la
famille de Hrant Dink, accuse «toutes les structures étatiques» d’être
«impliquées» dans son assassinat et explique refuser d’assister au
procès afin de ne pas faire «le jeu de l’État qui se moque de nous».

Turquie : ouverture d’un nouveau procès dans l’assassinat du journal

La Nouvelle Tribune
17 Septembre 2013

Turquie : ouverture d’un nouveau procès dans l’assassinat du journaliste Hrant

Le procès à l’issue duquel sera jugé le reste des présumés assassins
du journaliste Hrant s’est ouvert ce mardi matin, répondant à la
volonté de centaines de personnes de voir enfin les tueurs face à
leurs lourdes responsabilités devant la justice turque.« Renoncez à
vos tradition, livrez-nous les meurtriers», « pour Hrant, pour la
justice», ou plus virulent encore « les fascites tirent, l’AKP
protège» sont autant de slogans que scandaient avec force et
indignation les manifestants devant un des tribunaux de justice
d’Istanbul.Rappelons que Hrant Dink a été violemment tué de deux
balles dans la tête le 19 janvier 2007 par un nationaliste gé de 17
ans. L’assassinat du journaliste qui était à la tête d’un hebdomadaire
bilingue turc-arménien avait alors profondément touché le pays.Après
Ogün Samast qui avait écopé de 23 ans de prison en juillet 2011, Yasin
Hayal, l’instigateur du crime, avait, lui, été condamné à la réclusion
à perpétuité, en janvier 2012 par la justice turque.Cependant, la Cour
avait invalidé l’hypothèse du complot et relché les 18 autres
présumés complices de l’affaire. Cette décision a donc été rejetée par
la Cour de Cassation qui a exigé que les juges se recentrent sur le
statut de « crime en bande criminelle organisée» dans cette triste
affaire.

Asmaa El Arabi

Arménie: les espoirs des pro-Européens douchés par la "realpolitik"

Agence France Presse
18 septembre 2013 mercredi 1:54 PM GMT

Arménie: les espoirs des pro-Européens douchés par la “realpolitik” d’Erevan

EREVAN 18 sept 2013

La décision de l’Arménie de rejoindre l’Union douanière menée par la
Russie suscite la colère des pro-Européens, pour lesquels la
“realpolitik” d’Erevan a eu raison des espoirs de modernisation et de
démocratisation du pays.

Début septembre, de nombreux Arméniens ont été pris de court en
apprenant que leur président, Serge Sarkissian, en visite à Moscou,
avait accepté que son pays rejoigne l’Union douanière pour l’heure
composée de la Russie, du Bélarus et du Kazakhstan.

Car après de longues négociations, l’Arménie, au côté de la Géorgie et
de la Moldavie, devait sceller en novembre à Vilnius un accord de
libre-échange avec l’UE, qui aurait constitué un premier pas vers une
intégration future au bloc européen.

Ce revirement a poussé des Arméniens à descendre dans la rue.

“Nous sommes venus ici pour dire que nous ne le permettrons pas”, a
déclaré lors d’une récente manifestation Lusine Hovsepian, 34 ans.

“S’il faut choisir entre l’UE et cette union douanière, nous
choisiront l’Europe, plus développée, plus démocratique”.

Les préoccupations autour du territoire du Nagorny-Karabakh, région
séparatiste d’Azerbaïdjan peuplée majoritairement d’Arméniens, et les
pressions exercées par la Russie, allié dans la région de l’Arménie,
semblent avoir eu raison des espoirs de rapprochement avec l’Europe.

Pressions de Moscou

“Il est clair que si on dépend de la Russie militairement,
économiquement et politiquement (…), il est impossible de rejoindre
une autre zone économique”, a commenté Tatoul Hakobian, un analyste à
la Fondation Civilitas, basée à Erevan.

L’Arménie dépend beaucoup de la Russie pour ses approvisionnements en
armement, qu’elle considère comme vitaux pour maintenir l’équilibre
face à l’Azerbaïdjan voisin, riche de son pétrole, sur la question du
Nagorny-Karabakh.

Alors qu’Erevan se rapprochait de Bruxelles, Moscou a envoyé une série
de messages sans équivoque à son allié, augmentant le prix du gaz
livré à la petite république caucasienne et annonçant un énorme
contrat de vente d’armes à Bakou.

“L’Arménie rejoint l’Union douanière non comme un partenaire à part
entière mais comme un mendiant humilié et malheureux”, a lancé
récemment lors d’un meeting politique Levon Ter-Petrossian, qui fut le
le premier président arménien après l’indépendance du pays et est
aujourd’hui un des chefs de file de l’opposition.

Le parti au pouvoir argue pour sa part que l’intégration à l’Union
douanière, un projet soutenu par le président russe Vladimir Poutine
qui milite pour une intégration toujours plus étroite des pays de
l’ex-URSS, fait sens.

“L’Arménie continue simplement d’approfondir ses liens avec un
partenaire stratégique conformément à ses intérêts économiques et
politiques”, a déclaré à l’AFP le député Edouard Charmazanov.

L’Arménie, le plus proche allié de Moscou dans le Caucase, a une
importante diaspora en Russie, dont les transferts d’argent vers le
pays on atteint l’an dernier 1,5 milliard de dollars.

Selon le sociologue Gevorg Pogossian, c’est la raison pour laquelle
55% d’Arméniens sont en faveur de liens plus étroits avec la Russie.

“Vous n’avez pas besoin de visa pour vous rendre là-bas et il n’y a
pas la barrière linguistique”, dit-il. Beaucoup d’Arméniens parlent le
russe, appris à l’époque soviétique.

“Le facteur décisif toutefois est que le bien-être d’un grand nombre
de familles dépend de ces transferts d’argent”, ajoute le sociologue.

“Un tel accord ne peut être dans les intérêts de l’Arménie car cela ne
va pas nous aider à résoudre nos principaux problèmes : la corruption,
les monopoles économiques et l’absence de concurrence politique”,
rétorque Armen Martirossian, du parti d’opposition Héritage libéral de
l’Arménie.

“L’Arménie, en choisissant l’Union douanière plutôt que des accords
avec l’UE, restera un pays d’oligarques et de monopoles comme la
Russie”, affirme-t-il.

mkh/del/edy/lpt/phv

La famille arménienne logée chez l’habitant

MIDI LIBRE
20 septembre 2013 vendredi

La famille arménienne logée chez l’habitant

Trois enfants ont dormi dehors. Pendant plusieurs jours, un couple
d’Arméniens et ses trois enfants gés de 1 à 4 ans ont dormi dans la
rue à Béziers (lire Midi Libre de mardi). Depuis mercredi, la famille
est hébergée gracieusement par un membre de la Cimade montpellieraine.
Ce jour-là, la famille était à Montpellier dans le cadre d’un référé
déposé contre le conseil général afin de leur offrir une solution
d’urgence d’hébergement.

Ce référé a été rejeté et l’avocate de la famille envisage
d’interjeter appel devant le Conseil d’État et de saisir la haute
autorité pour le droit d’asile. « Mais ça va être long » , craint
Célia Rinaldi, la bénévole biterroise qui s’est occupée des Arméniens
le temps de leur séjour à Béziers. Lundi, peu avant 19 h, elle s’était
rendue devant la mairie pour tenter de trouver une solution. « Le
soir, c’est un toit qu’il faut » , soutient Célia Rinaldi. Les
médiateurs de la mairie avaient trouvé une place à l’hôtel. Le
directeur de cabinet du maire avait rappelé que Célia Rinaldi
collaborait avec Jean-Michel du Plaa. « Mon engagement à la Cimade est
entier et en dehors de mes heures de travail. J’agis en tant que
citoyenne et au nom des droits de l’Homme » , dit-elle. PRÉCISION. Le
retour de la famille en Arménie est « impossible », assure Célia
Rinaldi. « En France, elle n’a pas le droit aux allocations familiales
et, concernant la petite, gée d’un an, elle n’est pas française, le
droit du sol n’existe plus. »

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

S.M. le Roi félicite le Président arménien

Le Matin, Maroc
Sept 22 2013

S.M. le Roi félicite le Président arménien

Sa Majesté le Roi Mohammed VI a adressé un message de félicitations au
Président de la République d’Arménie, Serge Sargsian, à l’occasion de
la célébration par ce pays de l’anniversaire de son independence.

Dans ce message, S.M. le Roi exprime Ses chaleureuses félicitations et
Ses meilleurs v`ux de santé et de bonheur pour M. Sargsian, et de
progrès et de prospérité pour le peuple ami d’Arménie.

Le Souverain y exprime Sa satisfaction quant à l’excellence des
relations d’amitié et de coopération liant les deux pays, réaffirmant
Sa détermination à continuer d’`uvrer de concert avec le Président
arménien pour le développement de ces relations au service des
intérêts communs des deux peuples amis.

Publié le : 22 Septembre 2013 – MAP

http://www.lematin.ma/journal/s-m–le-roi-felicite-le-president–armenien/188166.html

Kure Beach couple returns home after Peace Corps stint

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Kure Beach couple returns home after Peace Corps stint

Dave and Judy Smith get ready to board the world’s longest cable car at
Tatev Monastery in Armenia. Photo courtesy of Dave and Judy Smith

By Judy Smith
Special to the StarNews

Published: Sunday, September 22, 2013 at 12:30 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 20, 2013 at 12:54 p.m.

Our service has provided us the opportunity to experience life in a country
of which we knew little. In return, David and I hope to have left a positive
impression of what people from the United States are like. We also hope to
have improved the lives and outlooks of at least a few individuals through
our interactions and work.

Our Peace Corps service began in Niger, Africa, in late 2010. That
assignment ended when we were evacuated due to nearby terrorist activity.
With reassignment to Armenia, we were able to experience two totally
different ways of life as well as needs. We feel enriched by having these
diverse opportunities to live in countries that are so different.

So what’s next for us – and for other volunteers who devoted more than two
years to Peace Corps work? Of course, reconnecting with family and friends
in the U.S. is primary for a majority of us, including David and me. After
that, we intend to seek further chances to travel and possibly other ways to
carry out meaningful volunteer activities in areas of interest to us.

Within our group of 40 volunteers, many were young university graduates who
chose to do Peace Corps service prior to graduate school or starting paying
jobs. Law school awaits one of the brightest young women in our group, while
international studies in Monterey, Calif., is the choice of another. Several
volunteers have accepted or are seeking positions in Washington, D.C., where
they will build their resumes to move into foreign service or other
government careers.

A few are rejoining their parents, as many in the Millennial Generation must
do. They hope to figure out what they want to do with their lives, or plan
to further their studies so they can support themselves in the current
economy. Two years in the Peace Corps can be a time for contemplation and
decision-making while helping others, but it’s not always long enough for a
person’s desires to be met with realistic approaches to reaching personal
goals.

Within the group of older volunteers similar to David and me, a few will
resume work in their former fields of employment while another will seek new
horizons in the international arena.

In our exit interview, our Peace Corps country director asked what we
thought was our greatest accomplishment during the two years in Armenia. For
me, it was neither the transfer of skills, which is goal No. 1 for the Peace
Corps, nor was it the fact that I was able to obtain English textbooks for
my students when they’d never had them before. Rather, it was the cultural
exchange that took place between Americans and Armenians, the sharing of
what life is like for each other.

A related accomplishment for me was the chance to encourage young people to
study and improve their English, to continue on an educational path and to
travel to see the world outside of Armenia.

A few of my English students and other acquaintances will do this and will
be successful. Furthermore, help with personal businesses, including
development of a bed and breakfast, an outdoor sports company and a small
sewing business are directly related to consistent interactions David had
with individual Armenians with dreams to fulfill.

Service in the U.S. Peace Corps, which is now more than 50 years old and
known worldwide, is difficult yet rewarding. We are pleased to have had the
chance to be volunteers and now to be classified as RPCVs – returned Peace
Corps volunteers – for the second time. Our experiences cannot be replicated
but they can be shared. From day one of our service we regularly heard, “A
volunteer determines his or her own experiences.” That is what we did. As
David says, “We do not think anyone is worse off from our service in
Armenia.”

http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20130922/ARTICLES/130929978/0/search?p

Police fail to make protestors walk on sidewalk

Police fail to make protestors walk on sidewalk

September 21, 2013 | 17:15

YEREVAN. – The `Nationwide March of Independence’organized by civic
activists in the Armenian capital is disrupted by arguments between
activists and police officers.

The police officers are urging participants to walk on the sidewalk
not to block the traffic. Despite the efforts taken by police, at the
moment the protesters are moving along Mashtots Avenue. Some drivers
are supporting the activists.

The demonstrators are chanting `We are to decide’ and `the Republic of
Armenia is a sovereign state’ mottos.

In this way, the civic activists are expressing their dissatisfaction
over President Serzh Sargsyan’s announcement on Armenia joining the
Customs Union.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

From: Baghdasarian

President Xi Jinping: China and Armenia have always assisted and had

President Xi Jinping: China and Armenia have always assisted and had
respect toward one another

September 21, 2013 | 17:10

President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China congratulated
President Serzh Sargsyan and the people of Armenia, on the occasion of
the 22nd anniversary of Armenia’s independence.

`China is glad that, under your leadership, the Armenian people have
achieved great success in nation-building. We wish to the people of
your country greater successes on the road of development of the
state.

`Over the course of the 21 years since the establishment of diplomatic
relations, China and Armenia have always assisted and had respect
toward one another, jointly surmounted the difficulties, and earnestly
cooperated.

`The political interaction between the sides is constantly
strengthening, [and] the cooperation has achieved great results.

`I give a lot of attention to the development of Armenian-Chinese
relations. I stand ready with you to exert all efforts to raise
Armenian-Chinese relations to a new level, [and] for the benefit of
the two countries and peoples,’ the Chinese president’s congratulatory
message specifically states.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am